The law signed by the President of Uzbekistan on July 31 introduced amendments to the law: for failure to comply with the legal requirements of internal affairs bodies and national guard officers, the penalty will be from 5 to 12 times the minimum wage (previously 1) and, in the event of a repeat offense within a year after the imposition of an administrative penalty, a fine of from 12 to 30 times the minimum wage (previously 15) or administrative detention for up to fifteen days.
Among them are Quranic manuscripts dating from the 9th–13th centuries, rare jewelry, historical fabrics, and works of art.
Adil Zhanbirshin, a deputy of the Majlis (lower house) of Kazakhstan, has proposed introducing criminal liability for LGBT propaganda in the country.
TBEA Co., Ltd. has won the tender held by the Department of Commerce of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China and has been selected as the general contractor. The project will build a 20 MW wind power plant. Currently, the general contractor is carrying out construction work on a 10-hectare land area (Burchmulla area) allocated by the relevant resolution of the Tashkent regional governor.
By presidential decree, Abdusalom Azizov was appointed Deputy Advisor to the President on Representative Bodies, Non-Governmental Non-Profit Organizations, Religion and Youth Issues.
The "Khochu Zhit" ("I Want to Live") project, organized with the support of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense and the Main Intelligence Directorate, has announced the names of 902 Uzbek citizens who signed contracts with the Russian Armed Forces to participate in the war against Ukraine.
Earlier, reports circulated on social media that a special facility for storing arsenic located in the Yakkatut Federal District, Bostanlyk District, posed a threat to the Charvak Reservoir.
It has been announced that Russian writer Dina Rubina, who lives in "Israel", will give a concert in Tashkent on October 10 at the "Turkiston" Palace. Fortunately, after her interview with the "Dozhd" TV channel on July 20, the concert of the supporter of the fascist idea was canceled. During the interview, Rubina said that the Zionist-fascists have the right to "dissolve the Palestinians in hydrochloric acid" and "turn the Gaza Strip into a parking lot." For information, Dina Rubina was born in Tashkent in 1953, taught at the Institute of Culture, and was a member of the Writers' Union of the Uzbek SSR. In fact, it is incomprehensible that people with fascist views would give a concert in the capital of Uzbekistan. It is even more surprising that some Uzbek-language media outlets are defending them.
Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev's visit to Turkey has been discussed with anger in Russian media, with Russian propaganda calling Tokayev a "master of political balance."
Additionally, religious figures cannot become president or deputy for five years after ceasing religious activities.